Apple and US government appeal to public opinion on the court's privacy dispute

Apple’s CEO Tim Cook said the case “is about much more than a single phone or a single investigation”, it risks a precedent that “threatens everyone’s civil liberties”

FBI Director James B. Comey issued his own message to the public, asking people to “take a deep breath” and describing the government’s request as quite narrow. The iPhone the FBI needs help in unlocking was used by Syed Rizwan Farook, one of two shooters in the Dec. 2 attacks that killed 14 people and wounded 22

The public dispute in the United States between the Justice Department and Apple continued Monday as the tech giant called on the government to withdraw its demand for help in unlocking a phone used by one of the shooters in December’s terrorist attacks in San Bernardino, Calif., and instead let a commission of experts discuss the issue.

Apple’s chief executive, Tim Cook, told employees Monday that the case “is about much more than a single phone or a single investigation” and risked setting a precedent that “threatens everyone’s civil liberties” — the latest salvo in a war of words between the federal government and one of the world’s most valuable companies.

FBI Director James B. Comey issued his own message to the public late Sunday, asking people to “take a deep breath” and describing the government’s request as quite narrow. He insisted that authorities were not asking Apple to create “a master key,” as the company has asserted, and that the government’s demand was not “trying to set a precedent” that will invade user privacy, but was “about the victims and justice.”

Comey added: “Maybe the phone holds the clue to finding more terrorists. Maybe it doesn’t. But we can’t look the survivors in the eye, or ourselves in the mirror, if we don’t follow this lead.”

The two sides are waging a high-stakes battle on two fronts — in the courts of law and public opinion — on the controversial issue of how far the government can go to require companies to provide help in unlocking encrypted phones. It is part of a much larger debate over balancing privacy and security in a digital age.

“As individuals and as a company, we have no tolerance or sympathy for terrorists,” Cook said in a letter emailed to Apple employees around the world and released by the firm. “When they commit unspeakable acts like the tragic attacks in San Bernardino, we work to help the authorities pursue justice for the victims. And that’s exactly what we did.”

Cook asserted that the government is essentially seeking to have Apple “roll back data protections to iOS 7,” an operating system launched in September 2013 that enabled Apple to extract data for the police in criminal investigations.

But beginning in September 2014, Apple began issuing iPhones with a different operating system, first iOS 8 and now iOS 9, which do not allow the company to extract data because the information is encrypted with a key derived from a password set by the user, and which Apple does not know.

The iPhone the FBI needs help in unlocking was used by Syed Rizwan Farook, one of two shooters in the Dec. 2 attacks that killed 14 people and wounded 22. It runs on iOS 9. Last Tuesday, the Justice Department got a court to order the firm to design software that would disable a feature on the phone that wipes all the data after 10 incorrect tries at guessing the password.

“We simply want the chance, with a search warrant, to try to guess the terrorist’s pass-code without the phone essentially self-destructing, and without it taking a decade to guess correctly,” Comey said. “We don’t want to break anyone’s encryption.”

He said the tension in the case should not be “resolved by corporations that sell stuff for a living,” alluding to a line of attack made in a Justice Department filing Friday and one he has voiced on Capitol Hill: that Apple is digging in its heels on encryption for marketing reasons.

The firm has positioned itself in recent years as a champion of consumer privacy and data security. Although it quietly began strengthening encryption on its products years ago, it began to publicize its efforts in the wake of disclosures by former intelligence contractor Edward Snowden about U.S. government surveillance and spy agencies’ reliance on U.S. tech firms.

So far, the public appears to be siding with the Justice Department. In a survey conducted by Pew Research Center, a little more than half of Americans — 51% — said Apple should help the FBI unlock the iPhone, compared with 38% who said Apple should not.

Top Comments

The problem here is that the US Government wants the code that Apple developed to keep people's data safe, and it seems to work given that the entire resources of the NSA, HS and all the multi billion 'clever; people looking after' the US Citizens CANNOT break it.

Way to go Apple!

Feb 23rd, 2016 - 05:41 pm 0

Hepatia

Apple has got itself into a fix. They have promised the customers that their data is safe on Apple phones. The problem is that they are not relying on the laws of math to make the system cryptographically safe but the laws of the state to block the obvious attack vectors. And the result is that Apple, and their customers, will lose.

There is only one type of cryptography that is worth having - strong encryption. That is, irrespective of who controls the signing keys that Apple currently holds, the encryption remains unbreakable (by Apple, the FBI, NSA or any agency of the PRC and so on). Unfortunately such technology is not 'user friendly'. This is the business model problem that Apple, and others, face in the consumer market.